
‘We said yes to everything!' John Reis on his blistering punk career, from Hot Snakes to Rocket from the Crypt
It began when the pandemic forced Hot Snakes off the road mid-tour early in 2020. 'It came at a time in our lives where, even though it was just a couple of years we couldn't tour, we could feel how precious those years were. We're getting older, and we're already thinking, 'How much longer will I be able to do this?'' Reis pauses. 'And then my friend Rick went into the other realm.'
Reis first met Rick Froberg – who died in 2023 aged 55 of an undiagnosed heart condition – in 1986, at a picnic for San Diego punks held by the publisher of an anarchist newsletter. Both helped establish the DIY, all-ages scene at San Diego's Ché Cafe, as a refuge from the city's 'super-violent' punk clubs. And when Reis's instrumental trio Pitchfork decided they needed a vocalist, Rick volunteered. 'He'd never sung before, and he was a shy dude, too,' Reis remembers. 'But he sounded amazing, and wrote such good lyrics, viewing the world through a lens far beyond his years. We went from three guys making noise in a garage, to four guys making a much better noise in a garage.'
Reis's next group with Froberg, Drive Like Jehu, were 'more complex, more dissonant', influenced by Sonic Youth, the MC5's free-jazz excursions and Neu!'s avant garde experiments. Froberg hollered like a demented preacher over angular, mathematical riffs, while on the epic Luau, on Jehu's second album Yank Crime, Reis's guitar howled like a broken siren. He came across this thrilling din after incorrectly reassembling his amplifier post-repair. 'The transformer was igniting the tubes and burning through them,' he grins. 'Whenever I got close to that thing, it screamed. And it sounded awesome.'
It was the early 90s, when major labels signed every gnarly punk group, hoping to find the next Nirvana. Interscope nabbed Jehu, though their noise remained resolutely radio-unfriendly. However, the label also optioned Reis's other group, the Froberg-less Rocket from the Crypt, who were a much more saleable proposition. Comprised of buddies from the Ché Cafe scene, Rocket had 'no motives other than 'let's just have fun',' says Reis. Rocket aped the primal favourites of Reis's teenhood – the Ramones, the Dictators, the Saints and Didjits – but their punk-rock party truly hit top gear after the group acquired a horn section. The inspiration for this development is, perhaps, surprising. 'As a kid, I thought Live and Let Die was the biggest song ever,' Reis says. 'So huge sounding. I approached Rocket with the mindset that more is more – the more people onstage, the bigger the sound will be. And I love how the horns sit with the guitars – it all sounds like one massive instrument. It just has this undeniable girth.'
Arriving as grunge mouldered, Rocket dressed in matching uniforms and greaser quiffs, took pseudonyms – Reis was 'Speedo' – and engaged in life-affirming rock'n'roll showmanship, including onstage fire-breathing and swinging guitars around their bodies like hula-hoops. 'Our music was honest and sincere,' Reis says, 'but we also had this James Brown sensibility of: this is a show. Having fun is regarded as less artistically important than stuff that's darker in tone, and I always thought that was stupid. Rocket was the most fun band, ever. Wherever we were playing, that was the place on planet Earth you had to be that night.'
Their magnum opus, 1995's Scream, Dracula, Scream!, was the result of the 'fucking massive budget' Interscope had given the group. 'Instead of dividing it up between us, like anyone with a brain would've, we spent it on a punk-rock record.' The album featured string sections and glockenspiels, and Reis recorded 'orchestral transitions between songs' that were removed pre-release after the label balked and Reis realised they sounded 'a bit pompous' (the deleted interstitials were lost in the Universal Studio fire, he ruefully adds). Rocket scored an unlikely UK Top 20 hit with On a Rope, after appearing on pretty much any TV show that would have them, including Top of the Pops, TFI Friday and The White Room. 'We said yes to everything in the UK that we'd have said no to in the US, as an experiment,' Reis says. 'You want us to appear on breakfast TV? Yes. Use our music to sell shampoo? Yes. We had fun with it, because we knew it would go away. But for that brief moment, it seemed like people knew who we were, and they liked the music. And that felt good.'
Rocket toured hard, until parenthood changed their priorities. 'To be a decent parent, you can't be gone for three years straight,' Reis says (his son was born in 2006, and the 18-year-old now attends shows at the Ché Cafe himself). The group went on ice, and now play the occasional reunion show, while Reis invested his time in his Swami Records label, producing other groups, and forming Hot Snakes, his final band with Froberg. 'Rick always made songs out of my noise, elevated it into music,' he says. The group cut four albums of rapturously acclaimed, sublime punk-rock over 18 years, and were working on a fifth when Froberg died suddenly. That unfinished Hot Snakes material will someday see the light. 'But it's hard, man,' Reis admits. 'Just hearing my friend's voice … I know grief is a process. I feel very connected and close to Rick – we still have a dialogue in my head and in my dreams. But sometimes it's just too real and heavy when I hear his voice singing. I just get really sad whenever we work on it.'
Reis ploughed his grief into 2024's Swami John Reis album All of This Awaits You, which 'wore everything on its sleeve. I made it with a bunch of friends, and it was dark, but there was a lot of joy to it.' He believes, however, that distribution issues scuppered its release. 'I was crushed that record didn't get its chance,' he adds, 'and I wanted to put out another record so I wouldn't feel the effects of that, and could move on. Time is precious, I don't want to waste it wallowing in defeat.' Time to Let You Down's lean, super-melodic punk – rock fuses Rocket's anthemic brutishness with Hot Snakes' dissonant attack. There's catharsis within its grooves, but precious little self-pity: the title track closes with Reis hollering: 'Dry your eyes and get out of your grave!'
'I was fucking angry,' he says. 'But I realised at an early age, I'm not a bluesman. Tragedy doesn't inspire my best art.'
Wallowing still has no place on Reis's agenda, and his eyes are trained firmly on the future. 'I already have the next record pretty much done in my brain, and the record after that as well,' he says. 'There's nothing to savour in defeat, only an opportunity to move on and do something new. I know I'm getting older. I just want to see where rock'n'roll takes me next.'
Time to Let You Down is released 21 March on Swami
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
25-07-2025
- Daily Mail
Bond girl, 76, who upset Roger Moore's wife after a first-of-its-kind love scene, looks unrecognizable in LA
The actress who made Bond history as 007's first Black love interest looked effortlessly glamorous during a rare outing in Los Angeles on Thursday—nearly 50 years after her breakout role in Live and Let Die. The former model, now 76, was spotted running errands in a chic, casual ensemble, proving she's still got the same star power that turned heads in 1973 when she starred opposite Roger Moore in his first turn as James Bond. Her steamy, groundbreaking scenes with Moore made headlines and, as he later revealed in his memoir, caused real-life tension with his then-wife, Luisa Mattioli. The Bond flick itself came with major star power: Live and Let Die featured a title track written and performed by Paul McCartney and Wings, becoming a classic in its own right. Before landing the iconic role, the American beauty had worked as a Playboy Bunny at the New York Playboy Club and made her acting debut in For Love of Ivy—a 1968 film directed by Sidney Poitier. So who is the trailblazing star who helped redefine the Bond girl legacy? The actress who made Bond history as 007's first Black love interest looked effortlessly glamorous during a rare outing in Los Angeles on Thursday—nearly 50 years after her breakout role in Live and Let Die If you guessed Gloria Hendry, you nailed it. Florida-born Hendry took on the role of Rosie Carver, the ill-fated CIA agent who meets a tragic end in Bond's arms. Her sultry scenes with Moore launched her into the spotlight, as Live and Let Die became a cultural milestone. But while the chemistry sizzled on screen, it reportedly stirred tension behind the scenes. In his memoir, Moore admitted that their love scene didn't sit well with his wife at the time, Mattioli. 'As Bond, I make love to Rosie Carver, played by the beautiful Black actress Gloria Hendry,' Moore wrote. 'And my wife Luisa has learned from certain Louisiana ladies that if there is a scene like that they won't go to see the picture. 'I personally don't give a damn, and it makes me all the more determined to play the scene.' Due to the film's depiction of an interracial romance, Moore and Hendry's scene was controversially cut from screenings in apartheid-era South Africa, where such relationships were banned by law. Trina Parks broke ground as the first Black actress cast in a Bond film, appearing as the fierce and formidable Thumper opposite Sean Connery in Diamonds Are Forever (1971). While she didn't share romantic scenes with 007, Parks made her mark as one of his most memorable female foes. Two years later, Hendry made history as the first Black Bond girl to share an on-screen romance with the iconic spy. More than a decade after Hendry, Grace Jones stormed onto the screen in 1985's A View to a Kill, playing the unforgettable May Day—a deadly henchwoman with undeniable presence, again opposite Moore. In 2002, Halle Berry turned heads as Jinx in Die Another Day, becoming the first Black Bond girl in 17 years and making an instant impact opposite Pierce Brosnan. Then came Naomie Harris, who brought a new energy to the franchise as Eve Moneypenny in Skyfall (2012) and Spectre (2015), helping redefine the role of Bond's female counterparts for a modern era.


The Guardian
24-07-2025
- The Guardian
‘Laughing and out of breath, he thanked us for the snowball fight': fans on the magic of Ozzy Osbourne
I interviewed Ozzy in 1997, for Kerrang! magazine. We met in a hotel on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, where he proceeded to drink gallons of Diet Coke, and take the piss out of himself. He was the least pretentious rock star I ever met, and during my decade in the industry, I met hundreds. By the time I met Ozzy, I'd had enough of music journalism. I decided he should be my final interview because how do you beat that? I'd interviewed everyone I'd ever wanted to, including Nirvana, so it made sense to end my music journalism career by chatting with Ozzy. Ozzy was so self-effacing and hilarious. He told me about becoming partially deaf while working in a factory testing car horns, how he'd thought Spinal Tap was a documentary about Black Sabbath, and how the band named themselves after a horror movie for a joke. He was already shaking back then, and seemed very small and frail, but he had this gorgeous twinkling quality, which I certainly hadn't expected to encounter in the Prince of Darkness. And he clearly couldn't do a thing without Sharon, which he was more than happy to admit. Liz Evans, Tasmania, Australia My first ever gig was Ozzfest 2002 at Donington. I was so excited, I dyed my hair black and carried a wallet chain thick enough to tie up a ship. When I arrived, a guy in a top hat with a voice like the devil said I'd be 'lucky if I made it out alive'. I'd largely wanted to go because of System of a Down. But Ozzy was the show stealer. I'd become familiar with him due to the The Osbournes, then got into Black Sabbath. There was no other performer like him over the weekend. This – what I thought at the time – old guy had more energy than the younger bands put together. Needless to say, I was hooked on metal from that point onwards. Because of that festival so many bands got their big breaks. He not only invented metal with Sabbath but continued to support the genre the rest of his days. James, Cambridge I was a fairly obsessive heavy rock fan in my teens, and first saw Ozzy live when I was 16 at a one-day heavy metal festival at Port Vale's football ground in Stoke-on-Trent in 1981, alongside a few other bands including Motörhead. A couple of years later I was at university in Sheffield, and saw him for a second time at the City Hall. Afterwards, a friend and I got tipped off about which hotel the band were staying in, so we gatecrashed the residents-only bar and ended up spending an hour or two in the company of Ozzy, Sharon, and the rest of the band. He was an absolute gentleman, happily putting up with a bunch of geeky 18-year-old fans asking him loads of questions, and he insisted on buying multiple rounds of drinks for everyone in the bar. Before we departed he also decided to sign our foreheads 'Ozzy was here' with a Sharpie, as per the photo – earning us a huge amount of credibility when we finally got back to our hall of residence. What an absolute legend of a man – definitely one of a kind. Nick Payne, St Albans As teenagers in the early 1980s we all used to go to venues early and hang around the loading areas and back-stage entrances, on the off-chance of picking up an autograph or seeing a rock star. We did so during the Blizzard of Ozz tour, which were his first UK appearances since being sacked from Sabbath. We got there very early, around 2pm, and turned the corner to find guitarist Randy Rhoads and Ozzy himself, sat quietly having a cup of tea. We gathered tentatively and joined him. Rhoads and Ozzy gave off an air of openness and gentle bonhomie. This wasn't the Prince of Darkness, but a slightly apprehensive man who was hoping that the fans would accept his new musical incarnation. He was humble, communicative and very patient. It was like sitting with a mate's older brother, shooting the breeze for 20 minutes. After he and Randy went back in to sound check, we all remained stunned for a few moments. We'd had a cup of tea with the Prince of Darkness, and it turned out he was a really nice bloke. It's a real shame that successive generations only know him as the sometimes incoherent, grumpy old man of the TV show, The Osbournes. As in his heyday, he was the funniest and most disarming of all of the 1980s rock gods. Van Norris, Hampshire I was lucky enough to see Black Sabbath at Download festival in 2012. Ozzy was already a huge legend but hadn't done a show in a while and we went genuinely thinking that it may be the last chance to see him. When he wobbled out on to the stage, clearly a bit frail, I was worried. Oh no, I thought, this is a cash grab and he's really not up to it anymore ... but then he opened his mouth, and wow. His voice was still all there – it was like listening to him in his heyday. I'm still agog at how good he was. And he was clearly enjoying himself immensely. We've lost a great. Coral Pearce-Mariner, Norfolk In February 1972, during the Master of Reality tour, my father was due to pick me and my mates up after the gig at De Montfort Hall in Leicester, but was delayed by the bad weather. We hung round the back stage door and eventually the band came out. We spoke to all of them but it was Ozzy and Bill who gave us the most time. Ozzy threw the first snowball at us. We then had an amazing snowball fight with Ozzy and Bill which seemed to go on for ages. Ozzy, laughing and out of breath, thanked us for the fight and left with Bill covered in snow. For four kids from a small rural town it was magical. The gig was incredible. Gazza, Leicester I saw Ozzy when I was 17, at one of the very first gigs they played as Black Sabbath, at a mini festival organised by the Midlands Arts Centre for Young People in Cannon Hill Park, Birmingham, on bank holiday Monday, 1 September 1969. They'd originally been billed as Earth, but by the time they went on stage, they had become Black Sabbath. Rumours abounded that they had played at a school dance at the Convent of the Holy Child Jesus school in Edgbaston, where they had performed with a huge inverted crucifix on the stage behind them, much to the outrage of the nuns who ran the school. Because we knew most of the security crew at the festival, we watched them from backstage. Though they didn't have top billing, it was clear even then that they were the best band on stage that day, and that Ozzy had incredible charisma. That autumn, before they became nationally famous, I remember they occasionally used to turn up in the coffee bar at the arts centre where I and my friends hung out. Did I ever dare to speak to the Prince of Darkness? I doubt it, but he might once have asked me for a light ... When their first album came out the following year, I decided to model my own look on the spooky proto-Goth lady, dressed all in black, on the front cover. To my mind, that's still their best album, and I have it still; it sums up for me the cusp between the 60s and the 70s, and the awkward but euphoric liminal space between my adolescence and adulthood. Jenni Mills, Wiltshire The importance and significance of both Ozzy and Sabbath only truly sunk into my brain during the Back to the Beginning gig on 5 July, which I saw on live stream. It was a wonderful day seeing so many of my favourite bands pay tribute. The nail was finally hit on the head seeing Ozzy at the end. Some members of the crowd were in tears to see him performing well despite his physical deterioration. I wasn't sad for him at all – he looked like he was having the time of his life. I've also seen plenty of Ozzy live and am blown away by his stage persona. Thanks for everything, oh Prince of Darkness! George Heron, Liverpool


Daily Mail
22-07-2025
- Daily Mail
Byron Bay influencer's sausage dogs get STUCK together for hours after having sex: 'You could not make this up'
Ruby Tuesday Matthews received quite the shock this week when she stepped into her backyard. Having just celebrated her 32nd birthday the night before, the Byron Bay influencer discovered her two Dachshunds had become stuck together while mating. Ruby shared a series of clips on social media that showed her explaining the canine calamity. She said she was alerted to her pooches' problem by her nine-year-old son, Rocket. 'You could not make this up,' an exasperated Ruby began the first clip. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'So, obviously I had a few drinks yesterday because it was my birthday. I've come outside and Rocket's like: "Mum, the dogs are stuck together,"' she said. 'And the dogs have been having sex and they're stuck together.' Ruby admitted that she had tried various methods to separate her amorous hounds. 'We've tried ice on the butthole – apparently I'm meant to put my finger up the butthole,' she said. 'Maybe if we let them relax and eat a bone or something. It's going to be fine. They don't look too upset,' she added, consoling Rocket. It seems relaxation was not enough to extricate the dogs from one another, with Ruby uploading another clip admitting she had been dealing with the incident for nearly an hour. 'Guys, it's been, like, 45 minutes and there's no movement,' she said, as the two dogs, apparently content, sat on the grass, intertwined. 'I think we've just got to let them relax.' Ruby then shared another clip revealing that she was able to separate the dogs – albeit without an explanation as to how the operation was carried out. 'After another 30 minutes, we got the dogs off each other,' she said. 'Rocket literally vomited.' It comes after Ruby revealed, in March last year, that Rocket had a meltdown after she shaved the family dog Mango's fur. The influencer posted a clip to Instagram capturing her little one freaking out in the backseat of her car after he sees his newly shorn pup. 'I hate you, why isn't he the same?' the youngster is heard screaming at his mother. 'It's his new look,' she responded. Ruby captioned the clip with some telling words: 'Didn't go well'. She previously told her fans she would be shaving her dog's fur to make it easier to groom. Ruby has three sons and shares Rocket, nine, Mars, eight, and Holiday, two, with ex-partner Ryan Heywood and current fiancé Shannan Dodd. Ruby also recently revealed she was taking cannabidiol (CBD) gummies to ' get through life' and the chaos of raising three children. Last month, she shared some videos to Instagram showing her popping open some CBD gummies as her kids clung to her at the end of a long day. One video saw Ruby opening a bottle of CBD gummies from Hemp Farmacy as one of her sons tried to get her to 'make a face'. 'Lord help me,' she added, as she pulled out a gummy. 'You all need this to get through life.' Ruby started to laugh in the next clip as she handed the gummies over to her partner Shannan, while one of her children begged her to play a game with him. 'I swear to God if we didn't have these,' she wrote, as Shannan tipped two gummies into his mouth.